- #36
Locrian
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Choppy said:Okay - you've got me. It's all a big scam designed to cheat unsuspecting high school students into thinking that by studying quantum mechanics book they'll be qualified as professional engineers. /sarcasm
I don't think it's a scam, though I do think many physics programs could use many improvements. I think your message and the message coming from many universities don't connect well. I also think the sarcasm doesn't serve you well here.
Physics degrees are going to cover the same core curriculum because they have to. The curriculum will update as the field and the tools in it change, but undergraduate physics itself is not going to become a profession any time soon.
I'm not claiming it can or should become a profession.
If you want to argue that there are opportunities for physics programs to improve employability of their graduates - that's a great discussion to have in another thread.
Discussing how physics programs could improve is a natural extension of the discussion of how new grads ended up where they are now. It's well within reasonable scope of the OP's post, I'm not going to stop having that discussion because you don't like it.
After all, there could be potential future physics students reading, and they deserve several perspectives on the issues.